Modern Cat Tree for Large Cats | Tall Scratching Tower




Modern Cat Furniture Reviews
A 73-inch climbing tower that finally doesn’t look like you dragged it in from a garage sale.
It was a Sunday afternoon, two cats deep into a territorial standoff on my couch, when I finally caved and ordered the Mau Lifestyle MAU 73″ cat tree. My apartment already had one of those carpet-covered monstrosities from a big-box store, and I kept throwing a blanket over it when guests came over. The MAU tower arrived, I assembled it in the corner by the window, and within four hours my older cat had claimed the top platform like he’d been waiting for it his entire life. I haven’t touched that blanket since.

What I Love
For a cat tree at this price point, the build quality and the aesthetic are genuinely doing a lot of heavy lifting together. Here’s what stands out after a few months of real use:
- The plywood core feels solid โ no wobble at the top even when my 14-lb Maine Coon launches himself up there at full speed.
- The sisal rope scratching posts are thick and tightly wound, not the thin papery stuff that shreds in two weeks.
- At 73 inches, it fits neatly in a corner without eating the whole room โ taller than wide, which is smart spatial design for apartments.
- The neutral faux fur colorway reads as actual furniture, not pet equipment โ it photographs well and doesn’t clash with most interiors.
- Multiple perch levels mean two cats can coexist without a turf war, which in my house is nothing short of a minor miracle.

What to Watch For
No cat tree is perfect, and a few things are worth knowing before you buy. The faux fur, while it looks great out of the box, collects hair faster than almost any surface in my apartment. Plan to lint-roll it weekly if you care about appearances. Assembly also runs about 90 minutes โ the instructions are functional but not exactly intuitive, and you’ll want a second person around for the final few steps when the tower gets tall and tippy.
- Faux fur attracts and traps cat hair aggressively โ not a deal-breaker, just a weekly chore.
- Assembly solo is doable but awkward; a helper for the last third makes it much smoother.
Who It’s For
This cat tree is clearly built with larger breeds and multi-cat households in mind. If you have one petite cat who barely scratches, it’s probably more tower than you need. But if you’re managing two cats, or a single large breed like a Ragdoll or Maine Coon who tends to snap flimsy perches, the structural weight capacity and the multiple levels will actually get used. Senior cats benefit too โ the lower platforms are accessible without a leap, and the scratching surfaces help with claw maintenance without needing to chase them around with a trimmer.
“It’s the first cat tree I’ve owned that I didn’t try to hide before a dinner party.”

How to Use It
Scenario 1: Position it near a window for a multi-cat household and let vertical territory do the work โ one cat up top, one on the mid-shelf, zero arguments over the couch. Within a week, most cats self-assign their preferred level and stick to it.
Scenario 2: For a single large cat in a smaller apartment, the cat tree functions as a dedicated scratching and climbing station that replaces two or three separate pieces of pet furniture. One corner, one footprint, covered.
What People Are Saying
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Quick FAQ
Is this cat tree stable enough for large cats jumping from height?
Yes โ the plywood base and wide footprint handle the impact well. I’d still recommend placing it against a wall or in a corner for maximum confidence, especially during the first few weeks of use.
How do you clean the faux fur surfaces?
A lint roller handles daily upkeep, and a damp cloth with mild soap works for spot cleaning. It doesn’t come apart for a full machine wash, so staying on top of it weekly saves you a bigger job later.
Is this a good Mau Lifestyle cat tree review candidate for smaller cats or kittens?
Kittens can absolutely use it, but the higher platforms are a big leap for very young or tiny cats. It’s best suited for adult cats who are already confident climbers.
The Verdict
The Mau Lifestyle MAU 73″ cat tree is one of the few pieces of cat furniture that actually earns its place in a room you care about. The build is genuinely sturdy, the scratching surfaces will last, and the modern design means you’re not decorating around it. For what you’re paying, the quality-to-aesthetic ratio is strong compared to most cat trees at a mid-tier or even higher price point. If you have large cats, multiple cats, or you’ve simply run out of patience hiding ugly pet furniture โ buy this one.
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